SEO Tips — Yoast’s WordPress SEO Plug-in

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This is a re-post from the Webcomics.com archive. If you’ve ever been curious about the kind of information, tutorials and advice that you’ll get as part of your subscription to Webcomics.com, this is a good example.

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I strongly endorse the WordPress SEO plug-in by Yoast to bolster your SEO efforts. To that end, I have some thoughts on using it effectively. In short, I think most webcartoonists are using this plug-in (and others like it) wrong.

First of all, for a thorough, comprehensive tutorial to WordPress SEO, you should definitely peruse Yoast’s own tutorial. They live and breathe this stuff, and their tutorials give tons of insight into how SEO, in general, works.

Here’s my personal approach to using this tool.

For the record, I’m using Comic Easel — but ComicsPress works exactly the same.

First of all, since SEO works best with words — and not images — I try to include a transcript of my comic in the blog area of the Comic post. Like so:

I realize that Comic Easel has a field especially for the transcript — and for all I know it may be the better choice. But I can’t figure that field out for the life of me. And putting the text in the blog post suits my needs exactly.

Of course, I have the comic-post blog disabled on my home page in Comics -> Config because I really don’t want this content on my home page. It’s not particularly useful, and it pushed more important content (like actual blog posts) further down the page where they may be missed.

It should be noted that Yoast’s plug-in applies itself to every post type — pages, posts, podcasts, and even comics. So, in the same way that you should prepare an SEO profile for a blog post, you should prep one for every comic you upload. Here’s what it looks like.

Filling out the form is pretty straightforward is you keep in mind one thing: Everything hinges on the keyword (or words).

So your SEO is going to improve the more consistently that keyword shows up in certain places on your site. And that’s what Yoast does. It reminds you to put the keyword in your title, in the meta description, in the page URL, in the blog itself, and so on.

Here’s the form filled out for the example from above.

As you’ll note from the above graphic, I’ll get a green-text approval for each one of these categories I satisfy.

Heck, I even put my keyword in the Alt text for the comic’s image file.

Now, here’s where I think a lot of people go wrong

It’s all in the comic title. Being the creative types we are, we feel the need to come up with a clever title. But this is the last place to be clever! In fact, I’ll argue that this is the place to be as un-creative as possible — or maybe, just creative in a different way.

Because that title has to feature a keyword. And that keyword is the word that you expect people to punch into a search-engine field and (hopefully) find your comic.

And if your keyword (and, therefore, title) features a cute play on words, the chances diminish that someone would use that phrase in a search.

Let me give you an example.

I’m uploading this comic…

Now, I have my choice of several keywords. I chose “Most Wanted.”

Why?

Because (A) it applies to the comic, and (B) it’s a phrase that I assume would be used in several search-engine searches.

What wouldn’t have been acceptable would have been a play on words such as “America’s Least Wanted” or “Burnabout is fair play.”

Those are much more clever headlines, but there’s a much more slim chance that people will put them into a search-engine search. And SEO hinges on exactly that process.

So my headlines are always plane-jane keyword headlines that are chosen on the basis of words and phrases that I judge to be common search terms.

I’m not counting on their entertainment value. The words don’t appear on the main page (and they’re an afterthought on the archive pages). And my comic is plenty entertaining without cute titles. That’s not a job that I want them to do. The role those words play on my site is pure-and-simple SEO.